Synopses & Reviews
and#147;Starring human flies, daredevil aviators, bridge jumpers, and lion tamers,
The Thrill Makers is a great read, as evocative as it is theoretically savvy, and convincingly argued. Culling telling details from a host of long-overlooked sources, Jacob Smithand#8217;s account of sensational, high-risk public performance from the Victorian age to the 1930s unearths and illuminates the interwoven histories of public spectacle, masculinity, the motion picture industry, new forms of celebrity, and the expanding American metropolis.and#8221;and#151;Greg Waller, Department of Communication and Culture, Indiana University.
and#147;The Thrill Makers is an historical tour-de-force that illuminates the origins of risk-taking performance in American entertainment, and shows how its practitioners were gradually marginalized as invisible stunt doubles during the rise of the motion picture industry. Smithand#8217;s analysis of the lion tamer, the human fly, and the airplane wing-walkerand#151;as well as the many others who thrilled audiences before and during the advent of cinemaand#151;inspires us to reconsider the nature of media spectacle, masculinity, performance, celebrity, and labor at the turn of the last century. Impeccably researched, this book is a captivating read that re-frames the emergence of cinema in the context of its relationship to other forms of modern entertainment.and#8221;and#151;Barbara Klinger, author of Beyond the Multiplex: Cinema, New Technologies, and the Home.
Synopsis
Well before Evel Knievel or Hollywood stuntmen, reality television or the X Games, North America had a long tradition of stunt performance, of men (and some women) who sought media attention and popular fame with public feats of daring. Many of these featsand#151;jumping off bridges, climbing steeples and buildings, swimming incredible distances, or doing tricks with wild animalsand#151;had their basis in the manual trades or in older entertainments like the circus. In The Thrill Makers, Jacob Smith shows how turn-of-the-century bridge jumpers, human flies, lion tamers, and stunt pilots first drew crowds to their spectacular displays of death-defying action before becoming a crucial, yet often invisible, component of Hollywood film stardom. Smith explains how these working-class stunt performers helped shape definitions of American manhood, and pioneered a form of modern media celebrity that now occupies an increasingly prominent place in our contemporary popular culture.
About the Author
Jacob Smith is Assistant Professor at the School of Communications at Northwestern University. He is the author of Vocal Tracks: Performance and Sound Media, and Spoken Word: Postwar American Phonograph Cultures (both UC Press).
Table of Contents
List of Illustrations
Acknowledgments
Introduction
1. The Adventures of the Bridge Jumper
2. The Adventures of the Human Fly
3. The Adventures of the Lion Tamer
4. The Adventures of the Aeronaut
Conclusion
Notes
Further Reading
Index